Remarks by
John C. Bogle
Founder and Former Chief Executive, The Vanguard Group
On Receiving
The Honorary Doctor of Business Administration Degree from Drexel University
Philadelphia, PA,
June 14, 2003

Good morning! And congratulations to each one of you in the Class of
2003 for having the brains and determination, and doing the hard work,
to earn the degree you will momentarily receive from Drexel’s LeBow
College of Business.

This morning, as you take this next forward step toward your careers,
I ask you to think not only about what you want to achieve in
your careers, but why you want to achieve it. In that context,
I’d like to tell you a wonderful story that I hope you’ll
remember for a long time to come. The Reverend Fred Craddock, a remarkable
preacher from Georgia, may have been imagining things—the way preachers
are wont to do—but he says this story really happened. Dr. Craddock
was visiting in the home of his niece. There was this old greyhound dog
there, just like the ones who race around a track chasing those mechanical
rabbits. His niece had taken the dog in to prevent it from being destroyed
because its racing days were over.

Dr. Craddock strikes up a conversation with the dog: “I said to
the dog, are you still racing?” “No,” he replied. “Well,
what was the matter? Did you get too old to race?” “No, I
still had some race in me.” “Well, what then? Did you not
win?” “I won over a million dollars for my owner.” “Well,
what was it? Bad treatment?” “Oh, no,” the dog said,
“they treated us royally when we were racing.” “Did
you get crippled?” “No.” “Then why?” Craddock
pressed, “Why?” The dog answered, “I quit.” “You
quit?” “Yes,” he said, “I quit.”
“Why did you quit?” “I just quit. Because after all
that running and running and running, I found out that the rabbit I was
chasing wasn’t even real.”

On this day of celebration, achievement, and the commencement of a new
phase in your lives, it takes considerable temerity for me to challenge
you to consider what kind of rabbit you’ll choose to chase during
your careers. I do so only because—this may surprise you—I
challenge myself as to whether the rabbit I’ve been chasing
all these long years is real.

A Short Reflection on a Long Career

Let me set the stage by reflecting for a moment with you on my own career—the
product of being born at the right time; having to work for what I got;
receiving a great education; fantastic mentors; and benefiting from an
amazing number of lucky breaks, from opening Fortune magazine
in 1949 and discovering the mutual fund industry, to opening a book of
British naval history in 1974 and discovering the name “HMS Vanguard,”
Lord Nelson’s flagship.

My career has been a monument to what has been described as an “uncanny
ability to recognize the obvious.” Think about it! The rock foundation
of Vanguard is obvious: First, a few banally simple, but powerfully
profound, investment ideas—asset allocation, diversification,
index funds, and the absolute certainty that gross returns in
the financial markets, minus intermediation costs, will equal the net
returns received by investors as a group. Second, the simple, but unique,
shareholder-owned mutual structure that has enabled us to become the world’s
lowest cost provider of financial services.

And third, Vanguard’s equally simple human ideas. They
can be summed up in just two words: We care. We care about the
“honest-to-God, down-to-earth human beings” who constitute
our Vanguard crew and our clients—each with their own ambitions,
objectives, and financial goals. Caring about those whom we serve,
and about those with whom we serve, is our version, if you will,
of the Golden Rule. And there’s nothing more obvious than that.

Of course, it all worked. It had to! As a result, I’ve
never doubted that both our crew and our clients believe that the rabbit
I’ve been chasing in my career—essentially giving investors
a fair shake in their quest to accumulate assets for a secure future—is
real. And it is real! So what’s bothering me? Perhaps it
comes down to the conventional definition of “success”—a
word that I don’t much care for—as consisting of wealth,
power and fame. But those things don’t represent
success. They represent the fruits of success, and I’ve
seen enough of life to be absolutely sure that each one is a fake, mechanical
rabbit. The real rabbit is the career that serves our society.

Business Makes our Society Work

What is good about a career in business is that business is what makes
our society work. What’s good about finance is that it lubricates
the machinery of capitalism. And what’s good about entrepreneurship
is that it is the major force for innovation. And businessmen and women—from
the highest to the humblest, at all levels of an organization—have
been the driving force of American capitalism that has made our incredibly
wealthy economy the envy of the world. But as you move ever closer to
your careers in business, I hope you will ask yourselves whether you’re
going out there to chase the fake rabbit of success—wealth,
fame, and power—rather than the real rabbit of meaning—the
contributions to our society that stem from principle, virtue, and character.

It’s no secret that, in this quest, those who engage in business
careers carry a special burden. For it is in business and finance that
most of the people in our society make the most money, too often considered
“the bottom line” of success. Yet when we accept the idea
that “money is the measure of the man,” it’s easy to
deceive ourselves about why we do what we do. As Descartes reminded us,
four full centuries ago, “a man is incapable of comprehending any
argument that interferes with his revenue.”

Contrast businessmen and women with others who are chasing what
I believe are the real rabbits of life—physicians and surgeons,
teachers and scientists, sculptors and painters, historians and musicians,
authors and poets, jurists and true public servants, ministers and priests
and rabbis. Perhaps they earn our respect because they serve our society
knowing that accumulating great wealth is almost out of the question,
that fame is rare, and that power—at least temporal power—is
conspicuous by its absence.

But don’t stop there. Think too about the humble folk of this
life who do the world’s work—farmers and carpenters, soldiers
and firemen, plumbers and mechanics, computer programmers and train conductors,
pilots and navigators, landscapers and stonemasons. Our society wouldn’t
function without these good souls who get up with the sun and do an honest
day’s work, usually with neither complaint nor accolade, and are
rarely rewarded with those elusive fruits of so-called success. Yet surely
few of them need wonder about whether the rabbits they chase are real.
Of course they are!

Wondering About the Rabbit We Chase

Yet in the quiet of the evening and the sometime loneliness of the soul,
many of those who shouldn’t need to wonder about the value
of hard work and a life well-lived doubtless do exactly that. But whether
they wonder or not, surely any one of us who—by the blessings
of birth, genes, talents, luck, determination, and the help of others—achieves
the financial rewards of what passes for business success deserve no such
exemption. We’ll be better human beings and achieve greater things
if we challenge ourselves to pursue careers that create value for our
society—with personal wealth not as the goal, but as the
by-product. Paraphrasing Schumpeter, the joy of business lies
in the drive to succeed for the sake, not of the fruits of success—yes,
wealth, power, and fame—but of success itself, in the will to conquer,
in the impulse to fight for what’s right, and in the thrill of exercising
our energy and ingenuity.

We’re all in the human race together—those who undertake
the nobler missions of life, those unsung heroes who make our world work,
and those of us who are lucky enough to earn a good living through our
business careers. So rather than running after a rabbit and finally finding
that it’s fake, and, like the greyhound we met at the outset, quitting
in dismay, let’s just make sure that we who choose business as our
calling chase the real rabbit of life, doing our best—in
a complicated, risky, and uncertain world—to serve our fellow man.
Once we do that, let’s keep running—and running, and running,
and running the long race of a life well-lived.

Our society needs each one of you to be part of that mission. You
can do it. So when you get out there in the world of business, get
on with the noble task. And, “Press On, Regardless!”

Note: The opinions expressed in this speech do not necessarily represent the views of Vanguard's present management.